How Detroit became home to Patrick Kane’s ‘second chapter’

DETROIT — For the first 16 years of his career, Patrick Kane was synonymous with the Chicago Blackhawks.
His arrival as the first pick in the 2007 NHL Draft transformed the franchise, joining an organization that hadn’t won the Stanley Cup since 1961 and delivering three championships in six years, from 2010 to 2015. He was an icon for perhaps the greatest generation of young American hockey players ever produced, and the Blackhawks jersey he wore was part of that.
But when Kane does what is now inevitable, as he knocks on the door of 500 goals and the all-time NHL points record for an American-born skater, it will be an entirely different fan base celebrating.
Chicago, of course, will never forget what Kane did with or meant for its franchise. But with Kane now just three goals from 500 and 13 points from passing Mike Modano for the most points by a U.S.-born player, those milestones will come with the Detroit Red Wings — Chicago’s longstanding Original Six rival.
“You never really know where you’re going to be accepted, or accepted at all, from the fans,” Kane said recently. “But they’ve been really great to me.”
Kane has almost certainly already scored the biggest goals of his career. He has five playoff overtime goals to his name (tied for third-most in NHL history) and it would be damn near impossible to top his overtime Stanley Cup clincher back in 2010.
But as Kane keeps going, he still has every bit of his feel for the moment, one of the qualities that has come to define him throughout his career. His 15 game-winning goals since joining the Red Wings in December 2023 are tied for 11th in the NHL in that span — and he’s done so in fewer games than every player ahead of him on that list. His overtime winner in his return to Chicago in February 2024, and the iconic call from Ken Daniels and Mickey Redmond to accompany it, already feels destined for Kane’s eventual Hall of Fame reel.
And yet, even at 37, there is more to come. At least, that’s the hope.
“I would love nothing more than (for) my career to have, like, a second chapter,” Kane said, “and not just be viewed as a player that played for the Blackhawks. I mean obviously we played a lot of meaningful games there, and had some great years and a lot of great moments. But it would be great to create some of those memories here, too.”
The Red Wings began Kane’s career as an obstacle, an old-guard powerhouse the upstart Blackhawks had to topple in pursuit of championships. Now they have become the home for that second act, and everything that comes with it.
Kane is hardly the first legendary player to choose Detroit for some of his twilight years in the league.
In the early 2000s, the Red Wings became a popular late-career home for future Hall of Famers such as Modano, Dominik Hasek, Brett Hull and Luc Robitaille.
The franchise Kane signed with back in the winter of 2023 was in a very different place as the juggernaut those other players joined. Detroit had missed the playoffs in seven straight seasons while going through a grueling rebuild. If Kane wanted the quickest road back to the Stanley Cup, other destinations would have made more sense.
But the Red Wings had their own appeal. As a result of that rebuild, they were assembling a collection of young talent that Kane wanted to be a part of. They also had acquired Alex DeBrincat, a former teammate, linemate and close friend of Kane’s — and, Kane has said, a frequent point of contact while he was going through his decision process.
Maybe most intriguing were the market and its fan base. After all these years, Kane is still a showman, and a showman needs the right stage.
“They call it Hockeytown for a reason, right?” Kane said at his introductory news conference. “I felt like I needed to be in a market where hockey is popular, and it can get the city, the crowd excited. Hockey’s a big thing here in Detroit, so kind of excited about adding to that, and just playing my game and hopefully bringing a lot of excitement to the city and the fans and the organization and my teammates.”
By the end of the season, that was borne out. The Red Wings ultimately fell short of the playoffs via a tiebreaker, but their late-season push to get into the field featured some of the highest-stakes hockey Little Caesars Arena has seen. Kane was a big part of that, finishing the year at almost a point-per-game pace with 47 points in 50 games, including 20 goals.
He held up physically in the wake of a rapid recovery from hip resurfacing, and he clearly had something left in the tank. The only question was whether his time in Detroit would be limited to proving that and then moving on, or if it would be more lasting.
Even Kane didn’t seem to know the answer, speaking in the past tense after the season about how “it was fun to be a Wing” and that he would “definitely have some memories to last me a lifetime.” He didn’t close the door to a return, but after bouncing from Chicago to a 26-game rental stint with the New York Rangers and then to Detroit, he spoke of perhaps wanting some stability in the form of a longer contract. That felt like a potential sticking point.
Instead, on the eve of free agency in 2024, he decided to reverse course, signing a one-year, incentive-laden deal to remain with the Red Wings. And then, a year later, he did it again.
In the span of a year, Detroit had gone from a short stop on Kane’s journey to something closer to a new home — even if only a year at a time.
“I said that at first, because that’s just kind of what you think in the moment, right?” Kane said this fall. “And then as you study things, and whether it’s maximizing your value or keeping your options open, things like that, I think it made sense to do a one-year deal. And then we thought it worked pretty well last year. I think it worked well for myself and the team. And I think it was, after the season, just something we wanted to explore again. … This is my third year here, so it’s kind of more comfortable now, and settling in for sure. Always felt like I was really part of the team since I came here, they welcomed me with open arms, so it’s been a good fit, and definitely was the spot I wanted to come back to.”
Kane has elevated the Red Wings in two key ways.
First, and most obvious, has been on the power play. In the three seasons before Kane arrived, the Red Wings had been a bottom-half-of-the-league outfit with the man advantage. In 2022-23, they finished 17th at 21.1 percent. The year prior: 26th, at just 16.3 percent.
Adding DeBrincat in 2023 was already helping by the time Kane signed, but his arrival solidified Detroit as a group to be feared on the power play. His vision and playmaking ability are among the very best in the sport, and that impact was felt quickly alongside some outstanding scorers in DeBrincat, Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond.
That first season with Kane, Detroit end with the ninth-most effective power play in the league, converting on 23.1 percent of their opportunities, then posted a top-five finish last year at a dazzling 27 percent clip. This season, the Red Wings entered Sunday games sitting seventh at 24.5 percent.
That rise can’t be attributed to just one player, of course, as Detroit now has five legitimate stars on its top unit. But Kane certainly has a knack for maximizing them.
“The way he plays now is pretty identical to the way he played in Chicago,” Red Wings defenseman Ben Chiarot said. “You can see, still, when he has the puck on his stick, guys always kind of hesitate to go to him, just because he’s head up the time, puck on a string. He never looks down. He’s a tough guy to defend against because of that: he’s just so poised with the puck and he sees the whole ice. He knows where everyone is.”
Patrick Kane’s prowess on the power play has been remarkable for Detroit. ( Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)
The second major elevation is with his impact on a young team.
The Red Wings haven’t made the playoffs since 2016. That was Dylan Larkin’s first season with the team, and long before Seider, Raymond or Detroit’s many other young players were in the NHL. That’s one reason Kane’s ability in the clutch is so important, with a roster full of players who don’t have his experience in pressure situations.
Beyond that, though, many of the current generation of players grew up watching Kane. That makes him uniquely suited to make an impression on his young teammates now with his approach.
“Personally for me, just off the ice, the way he carries himself every day, leads by example,” Raymond said. “The thing that I’ve been impressed with the most is just how his love for the game is so strong, and he shows up every day. He’s 37 now, and achieved basically anything you can achieve as a hockey player, but still very curious, wants to learn new things. … He’s awesome, and I’m very happy and fortunate to be playing with him.”
Love for the game can often be a cliché. In Kane’s case, it’s more likely an understatement. Walk up to him and ask about any player in the league, any facet of the game, and chances are you’re going to get a deeply thoughtful answer. He’s a hockey nerd, plain and simple.
Last year, when he was nominated for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy for perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to ice hockey, Kane estimated that he skated or played hockey up to 350 days of the year growing up. To this day, he still views himself as a fan.
“Obviously it’s entertaining to watch games, but at the same time you can learn a lot of different things when you’re watching different players or different teams,” he said. “So I guess it’s maybe both those things, where you’re watching as a fan and you’re watching certain players for the entertainment aspect, but also trying to learn as much as we can too, to better yourself.”
Chiarot observed that kind of passion as a common thread among the first-ballot Hall of Fame-caliber players he has played with, in Kane’s case spilling beyond the game itself and into equipment, sticks and history. James van Riemsdyk, who has known Kane for 20 years dating back to the U.S. National Team Development Program, commented that for all of Kane’s talent, “his kind of biggest asset is just how much he loves his game and loves working on his craft.”
And while some of that passion can certainly be seen in games, it’s perhaps more important outside the public eye.
This preseason, when the Red Wings were still in the installation phase with their structures and systems, Red Wings coach Todd McLellan was debriefing with his team on the ice about something they had just worked on in practice, when Kane raised a point to the coach.
“If anybody sees things and anticipates things really well, it’s him,” McLellan said afterward, before offering a lighthearted counterpoint. “The problem right now is … he’s playing chess. We’re trying to introduce something and he’s seven plays ahead of everybody else, and we’re just trying to keep it simple, like checkers. I keep telling him, ‘We’ll get to that. We’ll get to it. Great question, we’ll get to it.’”
On that day, perhaps Kane was a few too many steps ahead. But in the big picture, that kind of moment speaks to the less-seen value he brings the Red Wings in these twilight years.
Even at 37, Patrick Kane is still reaching for new heights. (Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)
Kane’s legacy has been secure for many years now. He didn’t need a second chapter to cement it. But in Detroit, he’s writing one anyway — and is on the verge of making history in the process.
Modano’s U.S.-born points record is the milestone Kane has said would be the biggest in his mind. But only three goals separate him from becoming the 50th player in NHL history to score 500, and it’s impossible not to notice the opportunity ahead when he and the Red Wings visit Chicago on Saturday.
Detroit will play three more games between now and then, making it entirely possible Kane could reach that historic marker against the Blackhawks, in his original NHL home.
If it were anyone else, managing to tie that bow would seem too good to be true. For Kane, it would only feel right.




